Daily Business Review | Analysis|News
By Samantha Joseph | Celia Ampel | Catherine Wilson | February 15, 2018
The focus is on diverting attention from potential defendants in civil cases and pointing to mitigating factors that might aid the defense in the criminal case.
Connecticut Law Tribune | Expert Opinion
By Thomas O'Connor and Wyatt Jansen | February 14, 2018
The perception that summary judgment is more difficult to obtain in Connecticut state courts has led to a series of Superior Court decisions that all but eliminate its utility. Fortunately, the Connecticut Supreme Court has begun to take corrective action.
By Katheryn Tucker | February 7, 2018
A 65-page lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges one of the largest pain pill manufacturers in the country intentionally marketed drugs that created the opioid epidemic.
By Greg Land | February 7, 2018
After three days of deliberations, the DeKalb County jury apportioned only 1 percent of the liability to the complex's owners, dividing the rest among the shooter and other involved brawlers, meaning the slain man's parents will see none of the money.
By Katheryn Tucker | February 7, 2018
In March 2014, a 78-year-old man traveling through Georgia on his way to Florida exited I-75 to take a break in Marietta but couldn't take his foot off the gas, according to the lawyers. As a result, a 25-year-old woman died. Friends said she made the world a better place.
By Greg Land | February 6, 2018
The jury rejected the family's claims that the three days the deceased man spent with a dental bridge stuck in his throat contributed to his death from complications of Parkinson's disease several months later.
By Staff and wire reports | February 5, 2018
The families of six Americans kidnapped and killed in Colombia during the 1990s by the terrorist organization known as FARC settled before the scheduled start of jury selection in West Palm Beach federal court.
The Legal Intelligencer | News
By P.J. Dannunzio | February 1, 2018
An award of approximately $6 million to the estate of a heart attack victim who died after a feeding tube was mistakenly inserted into his lung has been upheld by the Pennsylvania Superior Court.
By Greg Land | January 29, 2018
The jury found the nursing home liable for only 20 percent of the award, but plaintiffs attorney Ken Connor said that because the panel found both professional and ordinary negligence—a claim for which the defense had not sought apportionment—he would seek the entire award.
By Verdict Search | January 29, 2018
MEDICAL MALPRACTICEBROWARD CIRCUIT COURTA widower recovered $456,000 after his wife died due to the delayed treatment of a brain bleed.In…
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